Ted Horsington


Edward Matthew Horsington was an Australian politician.
He was born in Timor, Victoria, to farmer John Waygood Horsington and Julia, née Farrell. Educated at Maryborough, he became a drover and miner after leaving school and worked in Queensland, New South Wales and Western Australia before settling in Broken Hill. On 31 December 1906 he married Rosalie Bryksky, with whom he had a daughter. From 1912 to 1922 he was secretary of the Broken Hill branch of the Federated Engine Drivers and Firemen's Union, and he also served as director of Broken Hill Hospital.
In 1922, Horsington was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly as one of the Labor members for Sturt. He continued as member for Sturt after the return of single-member divisions in 1927, and briefly served as Secretary for Lands and Minister for Forests from May to October 1927. He was expelled from the Labor Party in 1936 but readmitted later that year, and in June 1939 joined Bob Heffron's Industrial Labor Party. The ILP was reintegrated into the official Labor Party in August of that year, and Horsington continued to represent Sturt until he retired in 1947. He died at Waverley in Sydney later that year.